Her print awareness is impressive; she knows how to orientate the book and understands when to turn the pages; she answers all my listening comprehension questions, pointing to the ladybug, the car, the pencil, the blankie. Every read and re-read positively impacts her vocabulary. A toddler, she is actively (and with agency) constructing her own brain. Yes, she has a mind of her own. Typically, she is rapt but before I can finish some stories, she closes the book and then chooses an alternative. The process begins again. I will forever chuckle at the way she reverse-seats herself.
But is she reading? Not really. Not yet. Reading to children should begin at birth. All my grandkids have been raised with this advice, so they all love books, yet it's typically I whom I discover "reading" a book somewhere. Although she cannot yet decode the words, she invests the time to be a reader anyway.
Dear friends, in case you need a reminder today, don't worry about what you can't yet do: just begin. The future depends on what we do today.
It's so important to create lifelong readers and learners, and that is exactly the way to do it! When reading is fun and nurturing, kids love it!
ReplyDeleteExactly.
DeleteI agree wholeheartedly. Reading is a joy and can never start too early.
ReplyDeleteIt really is a joy.
DeleteThis is wonderful. It also brought back memories of me and my mom who gave me my love of reading just like that. :-)
ReplyDeleteI love hearing that it triggered happy memories for you. I didn't grow up being read to so I hadn't thought of that.
DeleteCodex: Oh geezzzuuus, db. My funny comment is no longer funny.
DeleteIt doesn't matter if she's actually reading yet: she's got a book in her hands, which is really all that matters at this point.
ReplyDeleteTruth.
DeleteThank you for this truth.
ReplyDeleteIf you're referring to the last line...I need to hear it most days too.
DeleteThe effects of early childhood reading (and that includes all shapes and forms from being read to, leafing through a book, pretending to read and so on) on cognition and abstract thinking and emotional health and happiness and . . . (insert more here) is so well documented. It's the best part of grandparenting for me right now.
ReplyDeleteYes! The impacts are huge! Thank you for highlighting some of them, fellow grandparent. Insert fist bump here.
DeleteYou are a good grandfather. The kids are lucky. As are you too, I’m sure.
ReplyDeleteI'm the lucky one.
DeleteCodex: See comment above. Don't know what to say. Reading. You're more than making up for it now.
ReplyDeleteI sure am. Insert fist bump here.
DeleteI love this! I have such fond memories of being read to as a child, and reading to my daughter when she was young. She loved the book, Madeline’s Rescue, so much, she had it memorized. She knew exactly what each page said, and would read it to herself. It was so cute to hear and see. She fell asleep in her crib once with it open on her face. One of my favorite photos of her.
ReplyDeleteIt's the sort of legacy I aspire to.
DeleteYET. The operative word.
ReplyDeleteEmil was the same about reading, would point at the bookshelves whenever I carried him into the room and if I didn't have time to stop and read to him, he'd cry.